France arrests two more suspects on Bank of America's foiled attack


A private security member stands next to a police van outside Bank of America’s Paris offices, after French anti-terrorism prosecutors opened an investigation into attempted destruction by fire or other dangerous means in Paris, France, March 30, 2026. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier

PARIS, March 30 (Reuters) - French ⁠authorities have arrested two more suspects on Monday over a foiled ⁠attack on Bank of America's Paris offices, bringing the total ‌number of detained to five, the country's anti-terrorism prosecutor's office said.

The custody of the first three suspects, all of them minors of age and who were arrested on ​Saturday and Sunday, was extended, the prosecutor's office ⁠said in a statement.

The statement ⁠did not disclose any information on the identity of the two new ⁠suspects ‌or on their links with the other three.

Under French law, suspects in terrorism cases can be held in custody for ⁠up to 96 hours, with further extensions possible under ​judicial oversight.

French police ‌arrested one minor on the scene in the early hours of ⁠Saturday in Paris' ​8th arrondissement after a patrol assigned to protecting sensitive sites spotted two individuals placing and attempting to ignite an improvised explosive device outside the bank. ⁠The other managed to escape.

The device, though ​rudimentary, could have been lethal, and officers prevented it from being ignited, Interior Minister Laurent Nunez said on Saturday.

He added the individuals appeared to be "common-law" ⁠offenders acting as paid intermediaries, in what he described as a known modus operandi involving proxies recruited to carry out such attacks.

He pointed at suspicions involving Iran as a possible sponsor, though no conclusion has been ​reached, he insisted. The Iran embassy did ⁠not respond to messages seeking comment.

Nunez said authorities had identified similarities with incidents ​in several European countries, including the Netherlands, ‌Belgium, Britain and Norway, where improvised ​devices targeted sites linked to U.S. interests or Jewish communities.

(Reporting by Inti Landauro and Mathieu Rosemain, Editing by Charlotte Van Campenhout)

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